
Image via Complex Original The No. 1 song on the Billboard Hot 100 was Eminem's "Lose Yourself."
Image via Complex Original The No. 1 film in America was the supernatural horror film (and critical punching bag) "Darkness Falls."
Image via Complex Original Gas cost only $1.47 per gallon.
Image via Complex Original Netflix stock was valued at $12.28 per share—$657.81 less than its current price.
Image via Complex Original The Dow Jones was at 8131.01, far less than its current average of 17,740.90.
Image via Complex Original The Nokia 1100 was the most popular mobile phone in the world.
Image via Complex Original iTunes (forget about Apple Music) would not launch for another three months.
Image via Complex Original Drake wasn't Drake yet; he was Jimmy Brooks on "Degrassi."
Image via Complex Original Kobe Bryant didn't have a shoe deal: His six-year contract with adidas had expired in 2002, and his next deal with Nike didn't begin until the summer of 2003.
Image via Complex Original Michael Jordan was playing his final season for the Washington Wizards.
Image via Complex Original Still unreleased, the original "Call of Duty" would go on to become the top-selling video game of the year after it dropped in November.
Image via Complex Original The day after Serena's victory, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers would demolish the Oakland Raiders in Super Bowl XXXVII.
Image via Complex Original Facebook was still a year away from launching.
Image via Complex Original 2014-15 NBA champion and MVP Steph Curry was only 14 years old.
Image via Complex Original LeBron James was under investigation for the H2 Hummer he had received from his mother as a birthday gift; the investigation would conclude on January 28.